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Nov 14, 2012
11/12
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he loved the science technology toys that the cia director uniquely has. i think he did take the job because it was the next great challenge when he couldn't be chairman of the joint chiefs. when i think about petraeus, the person, the interesting question for me is after this terrible fall, this big scandal, you know, he'll have a period of rehabilitation. but what's the next challenge that this smart ambitious guy will try to take on. some place like princeton still want him, will another university want him. on the morning that this broke, i actually spent an e-mail saying he was likely to leave following all what norah was saying. i don't know the answer. what he would have done if he had another couple weeks. they didn't say anything. when finally the story broke said sorry i couldn't get back to you earlier but youta>> re:a. >> rose: i also have been told, we're all talking about speculation what people said if they wanted it more than someone else but he did not have at the cia the kind of support system around him that gave him a certain confidence
he loved the science technology toys that the cia director uniquely has. i think he did take the job because it was the next great challenge when he couldn't be chairman of the joint chiefs. when i think about petraeus, the person, the interesting question for me is after this terrible fall, this big scandal, you know, he'll have a period of rehabilitation. but what's the next challenge that this smart ambitious guy will try to take on. some place like princeton still want him, will another...
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Nov 19, 2010
11/10
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there's extensive use of this technology and it allows for a nicotine to be more rapidly absorbed in the lung and affect the brain and central system. >> commander of the armies of the north. loyal servant to the true emperor. father to a murdered son, husband to a murdered wife, and i will have my vengeance. >> if we all go for the blond and block each other, not a single one of us is going to get her. so then we go for her friends but they will all give us the cold shoulder because nobody wants to be second choice. what if no one goes for the blond? we don't get in each other's way and we don't insult the other girls it's the only way to win. that's the only way we all get laid. ladies and gentlemen, we have your decisions. it's unanimous, winner and the new world heavyweight champion -- >> i got possession, apply conspiracy, i got people that will want you killed in cold blood. i have bank accounts, real estate, business all bought with money from heroin. i have hundreds of parents with dead kids, addicts that o.d.'d on your products. that's how i make it stick. this man killed th
there's extensive use of this technology and it allows for a nicotine to be more rapidly absorbed in the lung and affect the brain and central system. >> commander of the armies of the north. loyal servant to the true emperor. father to a murdered son, husband to a murdered wife, and i will have my vengeance. >> if we all go for the blond and block each other, not a single one of us is going to get her. so then we go for her friends but they will all give us the cold shoulder...
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918
Jul 6, 2012
07/12
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the explosion of mobile technology. there are more people with cell phones than people with toilets. i mean just as a graphic comparison. so a lot of the attention at this moment is on how to accelerate the mobile technology to help the poor, whether it's mobile banking or, and held which we're doing a lot of work in. but we want to look at the next new thing and we think it is the digital technologies and how they will be applied. we have one of the inventors who will be showing what he's calling open source hardware. we've talked about open source software a lot but he is actually created technologies that will allow you to do in realtime manufacturing there some local village for what you need. so a doctor has a medical device that he or she needs. they are at some rural village thousands of miles from the local hospital. they can actually now-- will be able to, we think, 3-d manufacturing of the instrument they need onsite in order to treat that patient. it's revolutionary. >> what kinds of things have interested yo
the explosion of mobile technology. there are more people with cell phones than people with toilets. i mean just as a graphic comparison. so a lot of the attention at this moment is on how to accelerate the mobile technology to help the poor, whether it's mobile banking or, and held which we're doing a lot of work in. but we want to look at the next new thing and we think it is the digital technologies and how they will be applied. we have one of the inventors who will be showing what he's...
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Feb 18, 2013
02/13
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so we think it is creating a dramatic change in how technologies can buy and use technology but also the innovation that you are going to see from customers. >> does anybody over 28 work for you? >> quite a few people. so probably the only reason we exist is that people over 28 also work for us. so we have a chief operating officer, a general manager at inopportunity for a couple years and he helped build a lot of the organizational and of our company but we think we have world-class talent sort of up and down the demographics and age ranges of the company. >> rose: what dow like other than business. >> hmmmm, well, i like pretending that i can play piano occasionally. >> rose: dow really. >> yeah, yeah. >> rose: who are your heroes. >> i have a lot. so probably just go on your web site and run through all of the shows that you've done. so i try and learn from a lot of people. >> rose: probably every one has been on this program. >> yeah. >> rose: from bill to steve jobs. >> you can learn-- you learn a little bit from everybody. so you can learn from bezos, katzenberg, from michael d
so we think it is creating a dramatic change in how technologies can buy and use technology but also the innovation that you are going to see from customers. >> does anybody over 28 work for you? >> quite a few people. so probably the only reason we exist is that people over 28 also work for us. so we have a chief operating officer, a general manager at inopportunity for a couple years and he helped build a lot of the organizational and of our company but we think we have...
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56
Feb 14, 2013
02/13
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v that kind of authority now when we move into the whole area of terrorism and counterterrorism and technologies that make it possible with a handful of individuals to destroy one of our cities then we're forced, i think, to think anew about our traditional ways of doing business, about how we make decisions, about how has the authority to make what decisions and that has, in fact, i think, probably generated is shift, if you will to the executive branch that the presidential authority is greater now than it was prior to 9/11. and basically for good reason. i don't always agree with the way it's used, but we felt an obligation to move aggressively along those lines. we didn't sit down and seiji we need more powers, we say how are we going to use the technical capability we have to intercept communication between al qaeda overseas and the people they're talking to here at home and what kind of authority do we need from the courts or from the congress. so we go through those exercises but i think it's driven by circumstance as much as it is by philosophy. >> rose: thank you. >> enjoyed it, charlie
v that kind of authority now when we move into the whole area of terrorism and counterterrorism and technologies that make it possible with a handful of individuals to destroy one of our cities then we're forced, i think, to think anew about our traditional ways of doing business, about how we make decisions, about how has the authority to make what decisions and that has, in fact, i think, probably generated is shift, if you will to the executive branch that the presidential authority is...
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Sep 3, 2009
09/09
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the kind of thing that allowed microsoft or othergreat technology companieso come along, i don't thi we're goin to do anything that would really blunt those kind of opportunities and the huge societal benefits that it creates. rose: do you have a role model in your life beyond your father? >> i'd say warren buffett as t closest thg i have to aole model. >> rose: bause? >> because of the integri and thoughtfulnessndoy he brings to everything he does. you know i.. i'm connuing to learn from m dad, i'm ntinuing to learn fr warren and manyimes when i'm makg decisions i y and model how theyapproach aroblem. >> rose: and you're oimistic about us and notonly the united states but in sense of being ableo come out of this global economic crisis? >> yeah, i don't think... yo knowthinking in ter of which untry was dominant in which era, you know, who enjed that? >> rose: well,n fact, we benefited from the fact that they re because of the whole range of isss. >> that's right. rose: markets included. >>ou don't eny your relati posion. if everybo was healthy and wealthy, that's good. 's mankind. i
the kind of thing that allowed microsoft or othergreat technology companieso come along, i don't thi we're goin to do anything that would really blunt those kind of opportunities and the huge societal benefits that it creates. rose: do you have a role model in your life beyond your father? >> i'd say warren buffett as t closest thg i have to aole model. >> rose: bause? >> because of the integri and thoughtfulnessndoy he brings to everything he does. you know i.. i'm connuing...
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74
Aug 19, 2010
08/10
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they've done an extraordinary amount of engineering work and technology. they brought things into the gulf of mexico that did not exist to do what they've done and stop the well. and many... >> rose: this is after the spill? >> right. many of those technologies did not pre-exist before the spill, had to be brought, there engineered and put in place. you could discuss whether or not it should have been there beforehand but regarding their engineering effort to control the well i give them high marks. >> rose: and these are things that have been developed that will therefore add to the body of knowledge you have in terms of if another spill occurs? >> exactly. if i could delve into that a little further. the way oil is produced in the gulf of mexico as they moved into deeper water... actually, all the drilling and all the mechanical issues associated with drilling occur on the seabed floor. there's where the blowout preventer is at and that's where the drilling takes place. all the drilling is laid by pipelines across the gulf of mexico. what we've had to do
they've done an extraordinary amount of engineering work and technology. they brought things into the gulf of mexico that did not exist to do what they've done and stop the well. and many... >> rose: this is after the spill? >> right. many of those technologies did not pre-exist before the spill, had to be brought, there engineered and put in place. you could discuss whether or not it should have been there beforehand but regarding their engineering effort to control the well i give...
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96
Feb 8, 2013
02/13
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>> because of the technology. you know, when i started as a foreign correspondent hi a notebook in my back pocket and a typewriter and i could-- i never had-- cell phones didn't existment i would disappear for days and days and days. and then i would find a telex machine and punch a tape and i would file. so you had time to find the story, to think about the story. nows that a not is a say we aren't doing a good job today. it's not to say it's not fun but it's not the same. demands are constant, i talk to you 1:00 my time in the middle east and come straight off that and bang i have to dot evening news. that's stimulating and it's fun and we're doing it well, i think, but it's-- there was a time when you could, you could disappear. you could pretend you were henry morton stanley if you were covering africa and that doesn't exist any more. >> rose: the other thing is you do it in a minute and a half box, you tell us a story generally in a minute and a half. >> yeah. >> rose: but what i love about being at cbs, for
>> because of the technology. you know, when i started as a foreign correspondent hi a notebook in my back pocket and a typewriter and i could-- i never had-- cell phones didn't existment i would disappear for days and days and days. and then i would find a telex machine and punch a tape and i would file. so you had time to find the story, to think about the story. nows that a not is a say we aren't doing a good job today. it's not to say it's not fun but it's not the same. demands are...
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56
Dec 6, 2012
12/12
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eye 56
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mitt romney stood on stage with president obama, it wasn't about television ads or whiz bang turnout technologies, it was about fundamental republican ideas versus fundamental democratic ideas. it was about lower taxes or higher taxes less government or more government, more freedom and less freedom. and republican ideals mitt romney carried the day. stevens was a controversial figure throughout the campaign. he drew criticism externally for being too cautious in defining his candidate and internally for being a sometimes divisive and material figure. in august a new republic profiled him as friendship with mitt romney. the article was published under the title the square and the flare. i've known stuart stevens for a long time and i am pleased to have him here at this table this one of his first conversations about the politics 2012, who won, who lost and why. thank you for coming. >> well i can clarify that. we lost. >> rose: but when did you think you were going to lose? >> we're always very realistic about it contrary to some roorts. we thought we had a good chance to win. after the storm i n
mitt romney stood on stage with president obama, it wasn't about television ads or whiz bang turnout technologies, it was about fundamental republican ideas versus fundamental democratic ideas. it was about lower taxes or higher taxes less government or more government, more freedom and less freedom. and republican ideals mitt romney carried the day. stevens was a controversial figure throughout the campaign. he drew criticism externally for being too cautious in defining his candidate and...
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96
Jun 20, 2011
06/11
by
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eye 96
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rose: the is also this, technology as it comes rang down the track may offer the first run movies like in the first month. you can see them at home. how is this going to change the movie business. >> if you create a viewing experience that will make it attractive for people to leave the house and go see a movie, they still want to do that. >> i agree. i mean say to me tree of life should be seen in theatre. no matter whether you have access to this any or way, see it in a theatre. >> same with cave of forgotten dreams. >>it is a relinl us experience. and i'm not a religious man. but you go, you sit in a dark room with strangers. >> you are spiritual about movies. >> you are sitting in a dark room with strangers and there is a kind of unanimous breathinand laughing and talking about and so on. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. happy summer. >> thank you. >> thank you very much . >> funding forcharli rose has been providthy coca-cola company, caioni sponsored by rose communications captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> and by bloomberg, a provider of m
rose: the is also this, technology as it comes rang down the track may offer the first run movies like in the first month. you can see them at home. how is this going to change the movie business. >> if you create a viewing experience that will make it attractive for people to leave the house and go see a movie, they still want to do that. >> i agree. i mean say to me tree of life should be seen in theatre. no matter whether you have access to this any or way, see it in a theatre....
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379
Aug 11, 2009
08/09
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eye 379
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it's avoidable if we sort of go back to our first, some of r first princiess and american values like technological creativity. like what i call the ateur spit. which is not abdicating everything -- >> talk about amateur spirit. that is a very intesting point you made. >> i really thk this country is aountry of amateurs in the literal sense. ben franklin and thomas jefferson were amateur poticians who put together this count. en it came here in the 19th cenry was amazed and love the fact that our political class were not bunch of professnal politicians like ty were in frae. >> people didn't leave college too into government. >> that's right. they were amateu it. when you look inventors from the wright brhers to ste jobs, they really had this passionor what they were doing. yeah, they wand to make money, probably. buit was really about the passio and that, that really is part of what makes us great. >>ou reminded me because it's in the book aut remembering whatteve jobs said. heaid it in a famous speech he made at the sanford business schl. >> yeah. >> what he said abt the most freeing time for him
it's avoidable if we sort of go back to our first, some of r first princiess and american values like technological creativity. like what i call the ateur spit. which is not abdicating everything -- >> talk about amateur spirit. that is a very intesting point you made. >> i really thk this country is aountry of amateurs in the literal sense. ben franklin and thomas jefferson were amateur poticians who put together this count. en it came here in the 19th cenry was amazed and love the...
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88
Apr 10, 2012
04/12
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it was once technology in 2001. housing in 2007 and 2008. >> in the financial sector alone there's been a crisis every 14 years since alexander hamilton founded the first national bank. >> rose: why 14 years? >> if you just add them up. sometimes it's five, sometimes it's eight but they run like that. what you're dealing with is the fundamental, human nature of fear and greed. and if you give people cheap money and assets are inplayed in thed, greed overwhelms. you make money expensive lid wicktys tight, assets are depreciating, fear overwhelms and we swing from side to side to side. so the role of the regulators and our governments is to be the moderator in the middle. the moderator so say to the asset generators, the banks, gee guys, you're going to have hold a lot of liquidity against that stuff. you're going to have hold a lot of capital against it. say to the consumeer we need you to have better disclosure so you know what you're getting into because you might harm yourself and try to provide these moderators.
it was once technology in 2001. housing in 2007 and 2008. >> in the financial sector alone there's been a crisis every 14 years since alexander hamilton founded the first national bank. >> rose: why 14 years? >> if you just add them up. sometimes it's five, sometimes it's eight but they run like that. what you're dealing with is the fundamental, human nature of fear and greed. and if you give people cheap money and assets are inplayed in thed, greed overwhelms. you make money...
100
100
Dec 2, 2011
12/11
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it's people who live in a totally different world, pharmaceuticals, are technology. they were all talki about the race. >> charlie: think about it for a moment. if you look at late night comments, most of the material is aut politics. >> sure. >> charlie: all of it by jon stewart. >> yes. >> youan't understand satire if you don't know what's being satirized. >> it's also -- >> homer got this. it's pursuing the grail, the most powerful job known to mankind. >> charlie: her who? >> homer simpson. you know, it is a great inherently a great yarn because the stakes are so high. but mere humans -- >> it's what shakespeare wrote about, come on. >> >> charlie: just give me my moment here. we did a series here about shakespeare. it's what shakespeare is about. jealousy, anger, treachery, scandal. we're going to get to newt gingrich in a moment. when you put this together, what were the guidelines for you. first of all you had to find the right guys. you had two of them right here. the two. what else. what were the imperatives for you in putting these four e books together. >>
it's people who live in a totally different world, pharmaceuticals, are technology. they were all talki about the race. >> charlie: think about it for a moment. if you look at late night comments, most of the material is aut politics. >> sure. >> charlie: all of it by jon stewart. >> yes. >> youan't understand satire if you don't know what's being satirized. >> it's also -- >> homer got this. it's pursuing the grail, the most powerful job known to...